Multiple tiny earthquakes rattle Yellowstone. Could the big one be far behind?
Any disaster fiend will tell you that Yellowstone National Park is long overdue for a monster eruption that could leave as much as half the U.S. under a blanket of ash. And there are rumblings the big one could be imminent in the wake of a series of 30-plus mini-earthquakes in the park over the past few days—too weak to be felt by humans for the most part but picked up by the seismometers at the University of Utah.
After all, the geologic record shows that the giant caldera we affectionately call Yellowstone has blown every 600,000 years or so over the past 2 million years. The last big eruption? About 640,000 years ago when the park spit out about 240 cubic miles worth of rock, dirt, magma and other stuff.
But don't panic yet. Although the earthquake swarm continues, according to the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, the volcano alert level remains normal. And a slew of larger earthquakes have occurred throughout the western U.S., Alaska, Puerto Rico and even Pennsylvania in the past week without incident, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.[...]
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2012, Boo, 2012
Boo, Actually the number of them is up to over 400 now, and they are getting big enough to be felt. Of more interest than an eruption, is another big one like in 1959. Half a mountain slid off, buried a campground, and created a new lake. I was in Ronan Montana that night - and felt it way up there, as did our whole family.
Of course, it is Yellowstone…
Thanks Boo, been following this and it’s really got me on the edge of my seat. seismic data from utah. click at bottom of list for complete earthquake list.
I understand that the massive 1959 quake was felt as far away as Seattle. I have been to that part of Montana ten times. I often have fished the Madison River just below where part of the mountain collapsed and dammed Hebgen Lake. The old roadway still remains and you can see on of the houses that was basically swallowed up by the lake on the old roadway.
If there were ever another quake of the magnitude of 1959 it would be trouble city for anything in the Greater Yellowstone Caldera which is hundreds of miles around stretching as far west as Island Pond, ID. Indeed a quake like that could trigger a super volcanic eruption in Yellowstone causing a catastrophe that would make Katrina or the 2004 Tsunami look insignificant.
Oh, goody, something else we have zero control over that can destroy the world. Sigh.
I am from Montana, and yes, the signs are still there from the ‘59 quake. And having relatives in the Pacific Northwest who went through the fallout from Mt. St. Helens, which was teeny by comparison, I know I don’t want anything from this.
Do you figure that late at night when everyone is asleep, Barak Obama smacks himself upside the head and asks himself what the hell he was thinking of, before setting down into a nice fetal position in the corner?
If you watch the Discovery Channel program on the potential devastation of a
Yellowstone eruption, you’ll notice that it is the red states that get it.
Eruption as divine commentary?